The Triumph of Felix
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A drought-ridden Arizona town hires a very special kind of rainmaker: A siren.
But when it comes time to pay for her services, Mayor Archer Bertrand has a change of heart. After all, the old races are legally non-people and can’t sign contracts.
That was just his first mistake.
This short story is set in the old races-inhabited world of Magorian & Jones, written by Taylen Carver. It is not commercially released, but provided free to readers and fans of the series.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Special Offer – Free Urban Fantasy
About The Triumph of Felix
Title Page
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.—Edmund Burke
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
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About the Author
Other books by Taylen Carver
Copyright Information
ABOUT THE TRIUMPH OF FELIX
He must choose to save himself, or save the world…
Dr. Michael Jones, director of the old races refugee camp in Spain, is pressured to return to England for his own good. Life in Toledo, with Magorian, the first and only wizard of this century, and the old races who live in an uneasy truce with humans, is not good for him. Besides, the siren Aurelius has clearly abandoned his quest to summon the old gods to avenge himself upon the human race.
When Magorian translates the invocation to summon Agrona, goddess of death and carnage, found on a fifth century Celtic shield, Jones realizes Aurelius hasn’t given up his quest at all. Aurelius is looking for the Triumph of Felix—one of the keys needed to summon Agrona, and is weeks ahead of them.
The race to find the Triumph and keep it out of Aurelius’ hands begins…
The Triumph of Felix is part of the urban fantasy series, Magorian & Jones, by Taylen Carver.
1.0: The Memory of Water
2.0: The Triumph of Felix
3.0: The Shield of Agrona
4.0: The Rivers Ran Red
5.0: The Divine and Deadly
…and more to come.
Urban Fantasy Novel
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.—Edmund Burke
CHAPTER ONE
Cornwall, Britain. Nearly three years ago.
The old ones were clustered in a tight group close to the end of the small bay, crouched upon the sand without umbrellas, towels or refreshments that I could see from my position close by the soaring cliffs which lined the bay.
I saw a pale foot kick out from among their legs, the flesh lily white from too much time spent inside. An arm flailed. The low grunting sounded again and this time I consciously registered it and recognized it for what it was.
I got to my feet, brushing off white beach sand. “You three, stay with your mother,” I told Gwen, Heulwen and Owen.
“Is that…is one of them phasing?” my wife asked in Welsh, watching the old ones with narrowed eyes.
“Yes, I think so. I should help.”
She nodded. “Yes, you must.”
As I slogged through the sand toward the huddled group of old ones, I sorted in my mind what supplies and instruments I had in the kit in our car. I addressed their backs. “Let me through, please. I’m a doctor. I can help.”
The man on the sand between them writhed, his contortions kicking up clouds of fine white sand. He looked human, but he wouldn’t for much longer.
Everyone around him hovered with their hands out, as if they were reaching to help. Only, they had no idea what to do to help him.
I yanked on the nearest shoulder to make way for myself. A white wing snapped out in surprise and I ducked away from the thick upper edge. The angel looked over her shoulder.
“I’m a doctor,” I told her. “I can help.”
She looked troubled. “You know ‘ow to fix…us?” Her eyes were crystalline and beautiful, as all angels were. The expression in them was troubled.
“I’ve had a great deal of experience. Let me through.”
She brought her wings back in and folded them against her back. “‘e just started to…to scream ‘n to squirm.” Her east London accent was heavy. She tapped the arm of the water leaper beside her and they shuffled out of the way, both wings lifting and shivering as they did when they were preparing to launch themselves skyward, or when they were wary.
“He is moving into active phase,” I told them. “Although I’ve never seen it come on so fast. There are usually a few days of fever…”
“‘e was sick last week,” one of the other leapers said. “Moanin’ and groanin’. Then ‘e got better.”
“Hmm…” I said diplomatically. No one “got better” when they moved into active phase. They sickened, then they changed or died. I knelt in the sand beside the writhing man. “The shift was delayed,” I murmured, studying his facial features. I absorbed the details, cataloguing them. I looked up at the leaper standing over me. “My car is in the carpark at the top of the cliff. The white Mercedes. There is a Gladstone bag in the boot. You can open the boot from the dashboard. We left the windows down because of the heat.”
The leaper nodded and threw herself up into the air. Her gossamer wings spread with a soft snap and worked hard with the characteristic fluttering sound water leapers made when they flew. She lifted up in the air.
Farther along the beach, I heard gasps and cries of alarm as the humans saw her take flight.
I ignored them and studied my patient. He was kicking, thrusting and making harsh tearing sounds at the back of the throat. His eyes were screwed shut.
I frowned. If he had passed through the fever stage and avoided developing meningitis as so many of them did, then he should not be in such severe pain now.
I examined the way he was holding his eyes so tightly closed and the truth occurred to me—only it was too late. He screamed, a human sound and the last he would make as a human, then threw his head back and howled. It was a guttural, deep sound, for his vocal chords were shifting.
Along the beach, I heard echoing gasps and horror-filled murmurs.
The old ones around me shifted on their feet, alarmed.
“Please, please, ‘elp him,” the angel murmured. Agony twisted her voice.
“It will pass,” I assured her. “But we must get him out of the sun—”
The soon-to-be goblyn howled again, cutting me off. He straightened, rigid with pain. The ground beneath us vibrated and shook, almost exactly like an earthquake.
Even the Errata moved away, their eyes widening. I looked between them for the black face and black tusks of the goblyn I knew lurked behind them. I saw his red-rimmed eyes. “Control his power!” I told him sharply. “He cannot—not yet!”
The goblyn crouched down on the other side of my patient. He put his hide-thick hand on the shoulder of his new brother. “‘ugh…’ugh!” He shook.
“He can’t hear you,” I told the goblyn.
“I can’t stop ‘im,” the goblyn replied. “Not in the sun, not out ‘ere.”
“If we get him inside, then?”
“Maybe…” the goblyn said. “If it’s dark, like.”
I put my hand out as the ground beneath me seemed to shrug and try to toss me aside. A bone-deep cracking sounded. Then the world paused, for one last shining moment. Even Hugh grew still.
We looked at each other.
“What was that?” one of them breathed.
A man screamed, behind us. “The cliff!! The cliff!”
I leapt to my feet and whirled at the same time, my heart racing. A massive portion of the cliff had cracked and was falling away from the land behind it. It was as if a giant had cleaved an axe into the land above and now the severed section was falling away.
It fell with horrible slowness.
“Ffraid!” My shout tore at my throat.
Ffraid had Owen on her hip as she slogged through the sand, with Heulwen’s hand in hers, while screaming at Gwen to run.
I threw myself forward, into a hard sprint across the sand, wishing it was a smooth-running track with perfect traction. I slipped, losing my grip and nearly fell, then staggered onward.
As I ran, I watched the cliff drop like a stone axe head, driving into the soft beach beneath. The top half of cliff-face crumbled at the jarring impact with the land and spewed down upon us.
All of us.
CHAPTER TWO
The old city, Toledo, Spain. Today.
I scrubbed at my face and tried to breathe through the ache in my chest and the writhing a
nd squirming in my gut. My skin was crawling, my face was damp. Cold sweat.
“Here.” Lucía rested a cool glass against the back of my hand.
I took the glass of water and drank. The glass chattered against my teeth. After three mouthfuls which hurt to swallow, I put the glass down. “I could murder a bloody scotch right now.”
Dr. Lucia Robledo lowered herself gracefully into her big chair and raised one dark brow. “Scotch? That is what you are craving?”
I grimaced. “No, not really.”
Her gaze shifted downward, then back to my face. “Your leg is hurting, Michael?”
I looked down, too. I had been rubbing my thigh, just above the knee. That was one of the three places where it had been broken.
I let go of my knee and sat back on the comfortable leather sofa. “No, it’s not hurting.”
“You remember why it once hurt, though, yes?”
Dr. Robledo was paid to prod, so I forced myself to patience. “Yes, I remember now. Most of a Cornish cliff fell on me. Me and my family.” I drew in a breath. “I’m still trying to figure out which of the five of us were the lucky ones.”
Robledo kicked off her shoes and tucked her feet under one hip. “Up until today, you remembered it happening a different way.”
I scrubbed at my hair. The need to get up and pace was nearly overwhelming. No, not pace. To leave. To open the door, step out and never come back. “I give you due credit, doctor. You said hypnosis would work and I didn’t believe you.”
She fixed me with a stare that reached inside and saw everything. “You must give yourself credit, too, Michael. You want to escape this agony right now, but you’re putting yourself through it.”
I considered reaching for the water once more. I stared at a bead of condensation sliding down the side of the tall glass. “I have to,” I said bluntly. “My medical license depends upon me attending therapy sessions, monthly blood tests and staying sober.”
“And your mental health depends upon you doing the job your late wife urged you to do,” she added.
“Aren’t you supposed to lead me up to that?”
Robledo smiled. “You already know it.”
“As always, your couchside manner is…” I couldn’t think of a mild enough term.
“You like to cut to the chase, doctor. Wasting your time is the greatest sin anyone can commit against you these days.”
I flinched. Robledo was good at her job. She’d nailed that one with a silver tipped spike that drove deep.
“Why is time such a precious commodity to you?” she added.
“It’s not my time I hate wasting.” I was rubbing my thigh again and made myself stop. “I told you about Aurelius.”
“The…” She glanced at her iPad. “The siren who attacked you at Victoria Falls last year.”
“He flooded most of Sub-Saharan Africa and no one remembers his name. It flabbergasts me.” I sighed. “He’s out there. Somewhere.”
“And you have to find him, to stop him from calling down the old gods, who will destroy life as we know it.”
We both paused, replaying that in our heads.
Robledo gave a small grin. “Ten years ago, that statement coming from either of us would have put us under professional review.”
The quirk of her mouth and her nearly flawless English had been the reason I’d hired her. She had a sense of humor. She could pull back and see the absurdity of the big picture, when she needed to.
Her smile faded. “But you aren’t out looking for him, are you?”
I squirmed. I knew I was squirming. So did Robledo, who just watched me shift on the sofa.
Then, perhaps because she’d already put me through a ringer today, she relented and changed the subject. “While you are looking for Aurelius, what of your work at the refugee camp?”
“It’s a quiet period,” I said. “And Dr. Martinsson is efficient.”
“Efficient. That’s a neutral descriptor, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” I said flatly.
She waited.
“I don’t know Martinsson well. But the camp didn’t suffer while I was gone, so I have to assume her work is adequate.” I shrugged.
“And how do you feel about working there yourself? Are you still clenched when you are there?”
She didn’t glance at her notes, yet she had used the same word I had used in the first session we’d had.
“I’m still tense,” I admitted.
“On a scale of one to ten, with one being completely relaxed and ten being out of control, what is the level of your discomfort when you are there?”
“Nine point one,” I said, without thinking.
“It was eight, when I first asked you about this in October.” Again, she hadn’t glanced at her notes. I wondered if that was because this had been the goal post she had been aiming for all along, today. She would have reviewed the related notes carefully, in that case.
Robledo raised a brow. “You’re a doctor. You know that the human body can acclimate to almost anything, given time. Yet in four months, your stress levels have risen, not diminished. That’s not good, Michael.”
I gave her my best smile. “It is a complicated situation.”
“Yes, I understand that. You’re the world’s leading medical expert on the old races. You reached that level of familiarity by immersing yourself in your complicated situation for years—”
“I wasn’t exactly sober, then,” I pointed out, even though I hated reminding anyone of my shame. “I had a crutch.”
“And now that crutch is gone.” Robledo spoke with a tone that made me think I had just handed her the exact thing she had been waiting for. “You’re immersed in a world that reminds you over and over again that your wife and children died because of them. That you were hurt because of them. And now you can’t mask that pain anymore.”
“Forgive me, doctor, but that’s basic Freud.”
She nodded. “Which you are conveniently ignoring while you look for a solution which doesn’t exist. So let’s bring it back to basics. Working at the camp is not good for you. It is a trigger-infested swamp.”
My heart thudded as I stared at her, looking for a response out of the hundreds that occurred to me. Protests, explanations. Justifications. Instead, I said, “Wow…”
Robledo leaned forward. “Part of your rehabilitation includes cleaning up your lifestyle to support your sobriety. You have to think in the long term, as well as the short term—”
I laughed. “Right now, just getting through the day is as long term as it gets.”
“That’s part of the problem. Do you see? You’re constantly nudged by reminders. You blow all your energy stepping around them and white-knuckling your way to the end of the evening. If you were to take yourself away from all that, you would have energy to spare to consider longer term adjustments.”
“You’re saying I should quit.” I had trouble even speaking the words.
She shook her head. “I’m asking you to consider your options. Leaving the camp and finding work somewhere else is one of your options.”
“I think you reviewed the wrong section of your notes, doctor,” I said flatly. “You can’t remember Aurelius’ name and you don’t seem to understand that he threatens all of us. Not just the old races, but humans, too. If I were to return to England to take care of myself, everything else would fall apart.”
“And you feel everything else, the rest of the world, is your responsibility?”
I shook my head. “You’re twisting it. I’m saying that the choice to leave Toledo is a selfish one that, under the circumstances, can’t be justified. Not at any level.”
Robledo let it go with a short nod and picked up her iPad. “Then you must take refuge in routine. The boring and predictable is your hedge against triggers.”
I let out a breath I wasn’t aware I had been holding. Robledo didn’t have the power to make me do anything, but she did report back to my licensing board. Her reports were used to assess my probation. “Mundanity works,” I admitted.
“Mundanity…” She frowned. Then the frown cleared. “Mundane. I see. Yes. Well, for now, you must avoid the exciting life.”
“Living amongst the old races?” I raised my brow.
“As much as you can,” she amended, with a heavy sigh.